Hi i'm having a bit of trouble working out how to do this question. As i've not done Sturm-Liouville theory before and finding it hard to work it out.
The question is
y''-2y'+(1+lamda)y=0 with homogeneous bc on x=0,1
Write in S-L form
Write the orthagonality condition.

Now i'm having trouble working out how this is done could anybody be kind enough to go through the steps needed to work this out?
Thanks very much

May 9th 2009, 10:46 AM

HallsofIvy

Quote:

Originally Posted by math_lete

Hi i'm having a bit of trouble working out how to do this question. As i've not done Sturm-Liouville theory before and finding it hard to work it out.
The question is
y''-2y'+(1+lamda)y=0 with homogeneous bc on x=0,1
Write in S-L form
Write the orthagonality condition.

Now i'm having trouble working out how this is done could anybody be kind enough to go through the steps needed to work this out?
Thanks very much

The "Sturm-Liouville form" is .

You need to find p(x) so that .

In other words, you need to find p(x) so that , then multiply the equation by that p. That's essentially the same as finding an "integrating factor".

May 9th 2009, 11:03 AM

TheEmptySet

Quote:

Originally Posted by math_lete

Hi i'm having a bit of trouble working out how to do this question. As i've not done Sturm-Liouville theory before and finding it hard to work it out.
The question is
y''-2y'+(1+lamda)y=0 with homogeneous bc on x=0,1
Write in S-L form
Write the orthagonality condition.

Now i'm having trouble working out how this is done could anybody be kind enough to go through the steps needed to work this out?
Thanks very much

So we solve the associated equation

Now if we complete the square we get

Now we have 3 cases:

If

we get Now if you impose the boundry conditions you get the trivial solution